Questions tagged [en-passant]

En passant is a rule allowing a pawn to make a special-case capture.

En passant means "in passing." This strange move was added to prevent players from creating passed pawns by using the pawn's 2-square first move to sneak past defending pawns.

En passant is a special type of pawn capture allowed only when one player moves a pawn two squares forward and in doing so, ends up being adjacent to an opponent's pawn. On the next move only, the second player has the option to capture the pawn en passant by capturing as if the first player's pawn had only been moved one square. It literally moves diagonally onto an empty square. The pawn previously moved two squares is captured.

More information is here.

46 questions
9
votes
2 answers

How do you use 'en passant'?

I have been playing chess for years but I was just introduced en passant only recently. I keep on forgetting when to play this weird move. I keep on asking myself "is it on the 5th row or the 4th row" If there is an easy way to remember, please…
12944qwerty
  • 227
  • 1
  • 6
1
vote
1 answer

Can you wait and then perform an en passant capture?

I am new to chess, so sorry for this obvious question. I was surfing through the web and learned the en passant rule. In this question they say "You cannot wait a few moves and then use the en passant capture." So I went searching through websites…
Adi
  • 21
  • 2
-1
votes
1 answer

Why is there an en passant move?

Wikipedia says: It prevents a pawn from using the two-square advance to pass an adjacent enemy pawn without the risk of being captured. … which I understand. But why would this be a rule? After all, the pawn that is on the opposing side of the…
Noah
  • 129
  • 3